New on Netflix, Amazon Prime and other streaming week of July 5

What’s new for home viewing on Video on Demand and Netflix, Amazon Prime, Hulu, and other streaming services.

Top streams for the week

If you prefer your vampires young and sparkly, you can now stream the entire “Twilight” saga, starring Kristen Stewart as teenage human Bella Swan and Robert Pattinson as the ageless, undead Edward Cullen, on Amazon Prime Video, from the original “Twilight” (2008, PG-13), shot in Oregon and Washington, through “The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn – Part 1” (2011, PG-13) and “Part 2” (2013, PG-13), with a choice of theatrical versions or extended editions for most films.

“The Sinner,” starring Jessica Biel and Bill Pullman, was a sleeper summer surprise for the USA network. Based on the novel by Petra Hammesfahr, this compelling eight-episode limited series is a murder mystery by way of a psychological drama. Originally a self-contained mini-series, it was such a success that a second season is coming to cable on August. Netflix is now streaming the first season.

Shia LaBeouf is perfectly cast as brash American tennis player John McEnroe in “Borg vs McEnroe” (2017, R), a drama about the rivalry between the two young phenoms and their legendary 1980 Wimbleton match: the American volcano versus the Swedish iceberg (Sverrir Gudnason as Bjorn Borg). Streaming on Hulu.

“Beirut” (2018, R), a grown-up thriller about a political kidnapping in the violence of the undeclared warzone of 1982 Beirut, gives Jon Hamm a terrific role as a disillusioned diplomat pulled back in to service to save the life of a friend. Rosamund Pike, Mark Pellegrino, Dean Norris, and Shea Whigham co-star. Cable On Demand and VOD, plus DVD and Redbox.

Pay-Per-View / Video on Demand

“Blockers” (2018, R), a spin on the teen sex comedy with Leslie Mann, Ike Barinholtz, and John Cena as parents determined to keep their teenage daughters from losing their virginity on prom night, was a surprise hit. Also on DVD and at Redbox.

Also new: “7 Days in Entebbe” (2018, PG-13), a thriller about the 1976 hijacking and rescue mission starring Rosamund Pike and Daniel Brühl, and “Sunset” (2018, PG-13), a drama about strangers waiting for a possible nuclear.

Available same day as select theaters nationwide is “Bleeding Steel” (2017, Hong Kong, R, with subtitles), with Jackie Chan as a police inspector on the trail of a technologically-enhanced madman.

Foreign affairs: the Netflix India original mini-series “Sacred Games” (India, with subtitles) features Bollywood superstar Nawazuddin Siddiqui as a crime lord and Saif Ali Khan as a Mumbai cop on his trail. Also new:

frontier drama “The Skin of The Wolf” (Spain, 2017, not rated, with subtitles) set on the mountains of 19th century Spain;

“King of Peking” (China, 2017, not rated, with subtitles), a drama about a theater projectionist who sells bootleg DVDs to support his son;

comedy “Samantha! Season 1” (Brazil, with subtitles) about a 1980s child star trying to make a comeback.

Kid stuff: the new animated version of Jack London’s “White Fang” (2018, not rated) features the voices of Rashida Jones, Nick Offerman, and Paul Giamatti.

True stories: Gene Hackman narrates the short IMAX documentary “We the Marines” (2017, not rated) and “What We Started” (2017, not rated) looks at the culture of electronic dance music (EDM).

The new month brings a new batch of movies. Here are some of the highlights in the new arrivals:

“The Voices” (2014, R), a dark comedy with Ryan Reynolds who hears his pets telling him to do despicable things;

Oscar-nominated foreign language drama “The Insult” (Lebanon, 2017, R, with subtitles) uses the escalating legal battle between a Lebanese Christian and a Palestinian refugee in Beirut as a metaphor for simmering conflicts in the Middle East.

Joan Plowright is a widow who finds a powerful friendship with an aspiring writer and street busker (Rupert Friend), in the delightful, low-key British drama “Mrs. Palfrey at the Claremont” (2005, not rated).

Classics: Audrey Hepburn is Holly Golightly in “Breakfast at Tiffany’s” (1961), which won two Oscars for composer Henry Mancini, and “The Graduate” (1967, PG) made a star of Dustin Hoffman and earned director Mike Nichols an Oscar.

Streaming TV: Patrick McGoohan created and stars in “The Prisoner: The Complete Series” (1968), a heady, surreal twist on the spy drama and one of the great cult TV shows of all time. Prime Video also has McGoohan in “Secret Agent: The Complete Series,” the deft British spy drama that inspired him to made “The Prisoner.” Also new:

True stories: Al Gore returns in “An Inconvenient Sequel: Truth to Power” (2017, PG), which looks at how we’ve responded to the climate change crisis in the past decade and what we challenges we face ahead.

More new arrivals for July: Clint Eastwood’s “Gran Torino” (2008, R), featuring the actor in one his last screen roles as a crusty retired auto worker;

Christopher Reeve is an ambitious journalist who fakes a source in “Street Smart” (1986, R), a drama that earned Morgan Freeman an Oscar nomination and a career reboot for his supporting performance as a charming but ruthless pimp (Prime Video and Hulu).

“Before Midnight” (2013, R) reunites filmmaker Richard Linklater with actors / co-screenwriters Ethan Hawke and Julie Delpy for the third film in their chronicle of a relationship over the decades.

Foreign affairs: “The Treasure” (Romania, 2016, not rated, with subtitles), a comedy about two men on a desperate search for a rumored buried fortune, is from the award-winning director of “Police, Adjective.”

Arriving Saturday night is “Justice League” (2017, PG-13) with Ben Affleck and Gal Gadot as Batman and Wonder Woman, the veteran heroes who join forces with The Flash, Aquaman, and Cyborg to save the world after the death of Superman.